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Influence of Dietary Undetermined Anion on Acid-Base Status and Performance in Pigs1,2,

John F. Patience3,4 and Mark S. Wolynetz*

Animal Research Centre * Research Program Service, Agriculture Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0C6

Dietary undetermined anion (dUA), calculated as (sodium + potassium + calcium + magnesium) - (chloride + phosphate + sulfate) and expressed in milliequivalents per kilogram, is a major determinant of the acid or alkaline contribution of a diet. Three experiments involving 218 7-wk-old pigs were conducted to investigate the effect of chloride-mediated alterations of dUA. The first two experiments evaluated the effect on pigs of decreasing dUA in either a corn-soybean meal type of diet (expt. 1) or one with a lower potassium content (expt. 2). As dietary chloride increased, and thus as dUA decreased, the rate of growth declined, mediated by changes in feed intake; the effect became more noticeable at extreme dUA levels. The increasing acidogenicity of the diets resulted in a lowering of blood pH, bicarbonate and base excess. The third experiment compared a corn-soybean meal control diet with diets containing two levels of added chloride (7.7 and 9.8 g/kg) at lowered dUA (388 vs. 172 vs. 98 mEq/kg) or at constant dUA (388 vs. 412 vs. 431 mEq/kg). Elevated chloride at constant dUA had no effect on pig performance or acid-base status (p > 0.05); however, chloride-mediated decreases in dUA depressed all growth parameters and induced an apparent acidemia. It was concluded that dUA is an important dietary component with the potential to alter pig performance and health. It was also clear that dUA is independent of specific mineral (chloride) effects.


KEY WORDS: • acid-base • chloride • sodium • potassium • pigs

1 Presented in part at the 1987 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Animal Science, July 28–31, Logan, UT [PATIENCE, J. F. & WOLYNETZ, M. S. (1987) Undetermined anion—a dietary component independent of specific mineral effects in swine. J. Anim. Sci. 65 (Suppl. 1): 303–304 (abs.)].

2 Contribution number 1631 from Animal Research Centre and R-007 from Research Program Services.

3 Current address: Prairie Swine Centre, Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 0W0.

4 To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be directed.

Manuscript received 24 August 1989. Revision accepted 28 December 1989.







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